Wikiversity:Examples

This page lists selected content from Wikiversity. The page is related to featured content on Wikiversity, but extends much more widely to content which illustrate things about Wikiversity other than educational value. This page is not a directory of Wikiversity content.

This is a collection of originally unconnected resources revolving around the topic of teaching and learning online. Some of the resources are highly developed - others hardly at all. Plenty of opportunity for enhancement. 22 resources, some of which have many pages and are featured in their own right; others are smaller and some are currently just a single page. Authors include User:Teemu, User:Cormaggio and User:Leighblackall.

Launched in 2005; has managed to encourage other contributors to come in from the wild, but is still mainly the original scrappy but voluminous framework. Needs work on aesthetics and structure. Some pages need completing. Modules missing. Great opportunity for improving this.

Individually developed course material, probably in connection with real world courses. The higher page count in brackets refers to the total number of pages if closely associated projects by the same user are included.

Developed as part of Michigan State University's first Open CourseWare and simultaneously published on Wikiversity by the creators. An example of government grant money being used directly for the creation of open educational resources.

Course materials for training secondary school pupils to become involved in the teaching process as assistant to their teachers, following the principle that the best way to learn something is to teach it.

Originally run as a course at a real-world college. The content is almost entirely created by a large number of User:Areil123's students. Uses a lot of images and many podcasts prepared by the students. Genuinely very introductory. Some of the later lessons in this resource need better wikifying and dividing into subpages.

This section lists major projects on Wikiversity which are worth studying to understand what Wikiversity is, but which for some reason (usually given) are not suitable for listing as featured resources. The experience behind this listing is that during its first years, much content on Wikiversity was created and then simply disappeared, forgotten, leaving little sense of what Wikiversity was actually doing.

Was the point of this course to really plan a city on the moon? Either way, the use of fantasy scenarios for simulations is an approach used in many fields of applied learning. This project experiments with Wikiversity as a centre for multiple simulations related to the same topic. The project is unique in kind and worth studying to see what a wiki learning environment could be used for.

Unmaintained and incomplete. The author was a retiring schoolteacher looking to preserve his course materials for posterity. He had difficulty finding a suitable site to host them and turned to Wikiversity shortly after Wikiversity was launched. The publication of the materials elsewhere led to copyright misunderstandings. The coordinator left Wikiversity as a result of these misunderstandings.

Other things which need sorting out: wikification, conversion of quizzes to new format now that the quiz extension exists.

This was one of the larger reading group projects which experimented with synchronous IRC-based study methods coupled with wiki pages. Strongly experimental in nature. Worth studying to see what worked, what didn't and why or why not.

The contributor has created a variety of pages across the whole early primary school curriculum during 2007 and 2008. The resources have a feeling of incompletion and scatteredness. Support for this project needed?

The project is perhaps half-developed. The resources are remarkably flat and media-free. Could be developed. The most interesting thing about this project is that it appears to have no coordinator at all. It was put together by a genuinely leaderless and large group of contributors.

There are a surprisingly large number of detailed pages devoted to learning Japanese. This category needs sorting out and making sense of. The area is currently unmaintained, but there is plenty of opportunity for turning this into something good.

The project is structurally interesting, as it represents an early and partially successful attempt to realise a specific learning model for Wikiversity. The project attracted a variety of contributors over a period of more than a year.

This project is a prime example of a model of learning promoted at Wikiversity during 2006 and 2007. The initial "coordinator" starts a framework, into which a community is invited. The "coordinator" then steps back and disengages from the project, waiting for it to achieve a life of its own. Questions which need to be applied include: what is the measure of success? what can we learn from the (in)activity of this resource?

One of User:jtneill's earliest experiments in using a wiki environment for education. Exemplary use of media. Probably ought to be featured, but currently a little small? Could more pages in the same series covering different animals be developed?